Ebola….A “Must Know” List For Travellers….A simple alert guide …

A Nigerian port health official uses a thermometer on a worker at the arrivals hall of Mu

A Nigerian port health official uses a thermometer on a worker at the arrivals hall of Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos. Source: AP

AS THE Ebola outbreak in West Africa worsens, airlines around the globe are closely monitoring the situation but have yet to make any drastic changes. Below are some key questions about the disease, what airlines are doing and how safe it is to fly.

Q: Why are airlines concerned?

A: Airlines quickly take passengers from one part of the globe to another. With some germs, one sick passenger on a plane could theoretically infect hundreds of people who are connecting to flights to dozens of other countries. Health and airline officials note, however, that Ebola only spreads through direct contact. Outbreaks of diseases that can spread through the air, such as the flu and severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, are more problematic for airlines.

Q: Should people travel to West Africa?

A: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a warning last week for Americans to avoid non-essential travel to West African nations with the outbreak.

Q: Is Ebola deadly?

A: Very much so. If contracted, there is no vaccine and no specific treatment. The World Health Organization on Friday said this is the largest and longest outbreak ever recorded of Ebola. About 1,700 people have been sickened in Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria; nearly 1000 people have died.

Q: How is Ebola transmitted?

A: The virus only spreads through direct contact with the blood or fluids of an infected person, according to the CDC. It can also be spread through objects, such as needles, that have been contaminated with infected fluids. No airborne transmission has been documented.

Q: Are passengers leaving Africa being screened?

A: Since the outbreak erupted, the CDC has sent about two dozen staffers in West Africa to help try to track cases, set up emergency response operations and provide other help to control the outbreak. Last week, CDC officials said the agency will send 50 more in the next month. CDC workers in Africa also are helping to screen passengers at airports, according to CDC director Dr. Tom Frieden.

Are you worried about Ebola?

Are you worried about Ebola? Source: ThinkStock

Q: Are other airports screening arriving passengers?

A: Yes. Immigration and health officials at airports as far away as India, Australia, Russia, the Philippines, Myanmar, Macedonia and elsewhere are screening passengers for signs of sickness or elevated temperatures.

Q: Do US airlines fly to West Africa?

A: Delta Air Lines flies to Dakar, Senegal; Accra, Ghana and Lagos, Nigeria. The airline also flies to Monrovia, Liberia, but for unrelated business reasons previously announced it will cancel that service at the end of September. Delta is letting passengers with flights to the region now until Aug. 15 push back travel until the end of the month. United Airlines also flies to Lagos, but has not issued any travel waiver. American Airlines does not fly to Africa.

Health workers wearing protective clothing and equipment against the deadly Ebola virus.

Health workers wearing protective clothing and equipment against the deadly Ebola virus. Source: AP

Q: What are airlines saying about it?

A: There have been no flight cancellations in the US. All three airlines said they are in regular communication with government agencies and health officials and will follow their recommendations.

European carriers such as Air France-KLM, British Airways and Lufthansa all fly to Western Africa from their hubs in Paris, Amsterdam, London and Frankfurt.

British Airways announced Tuesday that it is suspending flights to and from Liberia and Sierra Leone until Aug. 31 “due to the deteriorating public health situation in both countries”. Passengers with tickets can request a full refund or a flight at a later date. The only other airline, so far, to cancel any flights is the Middle East airline Emirates. It has suspended its service to Conakry, Guinea, until further notice. It is still flying to Dakar.

Lufthansa notes that “there is no risk of getting infected by the Ebola virus via air circulation during flight.” Crews on Brussels Airlines flights have access to special thermoscans to check passengers’ temperature, if they feel it’s necessary. Air France has put an Ebola plan into action that includes medical protection kits and disinfectant gel available to the crew.

Passengers leaving Africa must fill out a questionnaire when entering the airport. They then have their temperature taken. They are only given a boarding pass if no symptoms are present.

: Has the airline industry dealt with any outbreaks in the past?

A: In 2003, there was a global outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS. The disease was first reported in Asia but quickly spread to more than two dozen countries in North America, South America and Europe. Unlike Ebola, SARS can spread when an infected person coughs or sneezes. During the 2003 outbreak, 8,098 people worldwide became sick with SARS; 774 of those died. Airports started screening incoming passengers for fever. The disease was devastating for airlines because fearful passengers stayed home.

Source:::: news.com.au

Natarajan

Inspiring Story of A Poor Farmer’s Son …Varun Chandran of Kerala …

He fought poverty.

 

He was teased for his funny ‘Mallu’ accent and eating habits. He fought ‘racism’. 

He sacrificed his football career for his family.

Today, Varun Chandran, from a small Kerala village, is the CEO of his own IT company and a dollar millionaire.

Remarkably, he has set up a part of his operations near the same small village he was born in.

If you were to ask me who my hero is, it’s not Nehru or Mahatma Gandhi. It’s I M Vijayan, the boy who, after having started out selling soda at stadiums and playing barefoot, went on to become the best football player in India. He was such an inspiration that I had his photo in my room, and used to pray to him before each game. He was my God!” says 34-year-old Varun Chandran.

Varun Chandran’s own journey, from an impoverished home in a small village in Kerala, to a Silicon Valley millionaire, follows a like pattern.

As a small boy his ambition didn’t go beyond chopping logs in the forests like his father, or following his uncle into the Army.

Varun was born in Paadam, a small village near Kollam. Most of the 800 families were poor landless labourers working in the nearby forest.

But the village owes its growth to Varun’s maternal grandfather, Karam Velal Sadananthan, who moved there to farm tapioca. The pioneering spirit could thus be a family inheritance.

“My grandfather was a local hero — a communist who got roads built and brought the first bus to the village. He even had an eatery where he served free food to people. This resulted in ever more people migrating to the village. He also fed the bus driver and conductor for free so that they were encouraged to come to the village,” Varun recollects.

His grandmother was also a hardworking woman who tapped toddy in the jungle and sold it to the workers who worked in the forest.

“I saw a lot of hard working people in the village; they either worked in the paddy fields or in the forest. But most were illiterate. My father himself had two jobs — he worked in the fields and also went to the jungle to chop logs.”

His mother ran a grocery shop out of their home. A strong-willed, ambitious woman, she insisted that her children attend the English medium primary school in the next town.

“If it weren’t for my mother, I don’t think I would have gone to school, or bothered to study even if I had. She made sure that we were educated, unlike most of the rest of the village.”
He still remembers studying under the light of a kerosene lamp as the village wasn’t connected to the grid until he was 10 years old.

“In fact, I can’t remember ever studying under an electric bulb. Even after we got electricity, power supply was intermittent and afflicted by voltage fluctuations. During the monsoon season we never had any power as the trees in the forest near our village invariably collapsed on to the electricity pylons.”

Money was hard to come by. The grocery store was not doing well. Their indebtedness rose to the point that everything in their house was taken away, and they had to sleep on the floor.

“The school fee was Rs 25 a month but my parents couldn’t pay the fees for six or seven months. I was thrown out of the class many times. I had to go through this humiliating experience many, many times in school.”

Later, he was sent to a boarding school and life changed dramatically for Varun.

“At boarding school, there is a big difference between being a rich kid and a poor kid. You are humiliated by the hostel warden for paying the hostel fees late. Even as a teenager you realise how important a role money plays in our society. Looking back, my experience was truly disgusting.

“I also realised how skin colour plays a major role in who you are. There were teachers who called me ‘the black boy’. It used to make me cry. That became my nickname in school. Some even called me a crow. It hurt me a lot and I hated it. I had more bad experiences than good ones in that school.”

But he used football to channel all his anger. So inspired was Varun by the rags to riches story of I M Vijayan, the well known Malayali football player, that he wanted to be like him. “I saw myself in I M Vijayan,” he says of his idol.

He soon became the school football captain and brought an inter-school trophy back to school. “That was my sweet revenge for all the insults and humiliations heaped upon me. Their attitude changed towards me after that, but it didn’t matter to me any more. I continued to play football with all the pent up anger in me, like one possessed.”

He won a government sports scholarship to enter a college in Trivandrum.

In the first year, he played for the Kerala state Under-16 football team in a tournament held in Uttar Pradesh. For the first time in his life, at the age of 16, he clambered aboard a train.
“That was my first step into the outside world, from a small village in Kerala to the northern part of India. It was an amazing trip to a place that was actually cold. Until then, I was merely a survivor. It was only when I went on that trip that I began to live my life.”

From then on, progress was steady for Varun the footballer. He went on to captain the Kerala University football team. “I started making new friends, learning new languages and meeting people from different communities. These trips made me curious about different experiences, people and cultures.”

His burning ambition was to play football for India and land a secure government job.

That was when he encountered another turning point in his life.

During his travels, he met one Abhoy Singh from Delhi who gave him his email id and asked him to stay in touch.

“I didn’t know what an email was. I found out that it had something to do with computers.”

He joined a private institute to learn about computers. “As a footballer, I had travelled all around India. But the Internet? It took me all around the world. New worlds opened in front of me.”

Just as I M Vijayan had inspired him to become a footballer, Abhoy inspired him to learn computing, and become a programmer and an entrepreneur. “But neither of them knows the influence they have had on my life!” he says.

Just before finishing his college degree, Varun was picked to attend a selection camp for the next Santosh Trophy — his opportunity to play for the Kerala senior side! But when at the camp, he injured his shoulder badly and had to leave.

He was back in his village, nursing his injury. But the situation at home was terrible; there was no food and an air of tension in the family.

“I had dropped out of college without a degree. After my injury, I wasn’t a footballer either. My mother scolded me and told me to get out and find myself a job. If I had ignored her remonstrations and stayed at home, I may well have recuperated and played football again.”

He asked his grandmother for help. She took her GOLD bangle off her wrist and gave it to him along with Rs 3,000, saying, “Go start a new life.”

That is what he proceeded to do, all those years ago, in 2003.

Varun went to Bangalore where a man from his village was a contractor. The man allowed him to stay rent-free in a tiny place that housed seven of his contract workers.

Bangalore was booming at the time and there were lots of call centre jobs available. But his halting English was a problem. He attended around 40 interviews for call centre jobs, but failed because he found it difficult to say a single sentence in English.

“I used to feel terrible about myself for not being able to speak English. After each failed attempt, I used to sit at the Sivaji Nagar bus stop and cry my heart out.”

He went to the public library and began to read and learn new English words with the help of a dictionary. Whenever he could, he watched BBC and CNN, and began to talk to himself in English.

Three months of this and he got himself a job in a call centre.

But it was not what he expected.

I was teased for my ‘funny’ Mallu accent and eating habits. Some refused to touch me because I ate beef. I found it ridiculous and racist. It was horrendous; I didn’t enjoy those two years at all.

“Today, I have visited over 25 countries, and feel that India is the most racist country in the world. Not once was I racially abused in any other country; they all treated me with respect and never looked down on me.”

Varun read everything he could lay his hands on. All the reading paid off. He got a job with Entity Data, a Hyderabad-based company, as a business development executive. He did so well that they sent him to the US after three months.

The boy from a tiny village in Kerala had arrived.

“I found that people in Silicon Valley were fearless and risk-taking. They were quite open too,” he says.

He joined SAP and later Oracle and was sent to Singapore. Silicon Valley had kindled the desire to start something on his own.

“I read a lot about the guys who had start-ups and dreamt of the day I would have one of my own. I knew I had to create something that would solve problems, make people’s lives easier, and be desirable.”

While still working for Oracle, he had started to develop products that would help users identify the best sales and MARKETING approaches by giving them data on potential customers’ likes and dislikes, and the best customers to target their products at. He used the products for a couple of years to see how they worked.

Satisfied with the results, he decided in 2012 to strike out on his own from his house in Singapore.

He registered the company in Singapore — the best place in the world to start a company, according to Varun — in just 30 minutes, and created a website. He named it Corporate 360 as “we take care of organisations’ 360 degree MARKETING profile.”

The product he created is Tech Sales Cloud, a sales and MARKETING tool that analyses large datasets in order to help sales and marketing teams target customers better.

He met some corporate houses and showed them the product, and within three months, he got three orders. “The first order was for $500 from a customer in the UK, and when I got it, I was screaming and jumping up and down in my bedroom.”

The year ended with $250,000 in revenue.

Then he decided to expand by hiring contractors, seven from Kerala and four from Manila.

He had cleared the family’s debts and bought a house in Pathanapuram town for his family. He now sponsors the local football club (Town Football Club Pathanapuram).

In 2012, the company had some 50 customers and revenue of $600,000. In November 2013, Varun started a development centre in Pathanapuram rather than the usual choices of Bangalore or Hyderabad.

“It was initially tough to get good programers. When I advertised for candidates, nobody was interested. Youngsters didn’t want to come and stay and work in a small town. They feel you are not working unless you sit in some Techno Park.”

Today, he works out of his own office building situated on land he purchased in Pathanapuram, and employs 17 people.

He is in the process of building an IT park there. “I want to prove that IT jobs aren’t just in Techno Parks in big cities, that it can be done from anywhere in the world.

“Today, we need product development companies; we need to innovate. Our company, though a fast-growing multinational company with over $1 million in revenue that works predominantly with western companies, is located in a small town in Kerala.”

Varun soon plans to open sales and MARKETING offices in Silicon Valley and London. But his product development will continue to be done in Manila and Kerala, and the head office will continue to remain in Singapore. By 2017, he plans to make it a $5 million company with operations in five countries.

His advice to young entrepreneurs is to innovate products that will be desirable to millions of people.

“Build products that will solve problems. Create the right culture and build your team around it. Improvise every day, gain traction and run — don’t ever stop no matter what happens!”

He says it was sports that instilled competitiveness, fighting spirit, and team spirit in him.

“Sports unite and motivate people. Today, the reason I am able to run a company successfully is because of the foundations I built as a sportsman.”

Source::::Shobha Warrier/Rediff.com 

Natarajan

A Skyscraper Literally Melts a Car in England …!!!

 

Wouldn’t you have hated it if you parked your car next to a gleaming skyscraper only to find hours later that the same skyscraper had melted your car by converging the sunlight? That is what happened to one unfortunate Jaguar Owner, Mr Martin Linsday when he parked his shiny new black Jaguar next to the newly constructed 37 storey skyscraper.

walkie-talkie-skyscraper

Dubbed as the “Walkie Talkie” due to its unique shape, the skyscraper has a bend in its Facade which makes the whole building act as a converging mirror. The street opposite to the skyscraper now bears the brunt of upto 70 degree celsius of concentrated sunlight.

walkie_talkie_melts_car_1

So when Mr Martin parked his car that morning, he had no idea that such a thing could happen and ruin his car. The story of him finding about the “accident” is also pretty interesting. A photographer who was walking around the area noticed the car in bad shape. He casually went upto a stranger who was standing on the footpath and said ” Have you seen that car? The owner wont be happy”. The stranger remarked, ” Well, I am the owner and thats pretty awful”. The windscreen had a note beneath the wiper which was from the construction company that is constructing the skyscraper. It read ” Your Car’s Buckled, Could you please give us a call?”.

melted jaguar owner

This incident has sparked a new debate on the viability of the skyscraper design as it has started to effect the life of commuters on the street. With temperatures soaring upto 80 degree celsius, this could also cause serious burns to some unsuspecting passer by. Therefore, the construction company is now planning to modify the design of the building.
Nevertheless, the Jaguar of this unlucky owner is ruined and it must have felt awful. Check out some of the pictures of the car  below.

Skyscraper melts car

melted jaguar

melted car 2

Melted car

Source::::wonderful Engineering.com

Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Fill your Heart with Love for God…”

Love is a precious diamond that can be got only in the realm of love and nowhere else. The kingdom of Love is located in every love-filled heart. Love can be experienced only in a mind flowing with love. The precious diamond of Love cannot be obtained merely through meditation or following prescribed sacred rituals. At best they only give mental satisfaction. The greater your love for God, the greater is the bliss you experience. When love declines in you, your joy also declines proportionally. Hence you must fill your heart with love for God. Love will not enter your heart if it is already filled with selfishness and self-conceit. Hence forget your petty self and concentrate your thoughts on God. If you love God, you will see Him everywhere. The essence of all spiritual disciplines is contained in Love.

Sathya Sai Baba

Joke of the Day…” Wrote a Check for Full Amount…” !!!

 

An elderly man, 82, just returned from the doctors only to find he didn’t have long to live. So he summoned the three most important people in his life to tell them of his fate:

1. His Doctor

2. His Priest

3. His Lawyer.

He said, “Well, today I found out I don’t have long to live. So, I have summoned you three here, because you are the most important people in my life, and I need to ask a favor. Today, I am going to give each of you an envelope with $50,000 dollars inside. When I die, I would ask that all three of you throw the money into my grave.” After the man passed on, the three people happened to run into each other. The doctor said, “I have to admit I kept $10,000 dollars of his money. He owed me from lots of medical bills. But, I threw the other $40,000 in like he requested. “The Priest said, “I have to admit also, I kept $25,000 dollars for the church. It’s all going to a good cause. I did, however, throw the other $25,000 in the grave.” Well the Lawyer just couldn’t believe what he was hearing! “I am surprised at you two for taking advantage of him like that. I wrote a check for the full amount and threw it all in!!!”

Source::::joke a day.com

Natarajan

” தயங்காதே…தளராதே…ஒரு தன்னம்பிக்கை தமிழனின் வெற்றி கதை …”

நன்றாக படிக்கக் கூடிய எட்டாம் வகுப்பு மாணவன் அவன்; ஆனால், குடும்பத்திலோ வறுமை. தினம், 10 கி.மீ., நடந்து போய் தான், படிக்க வேண்டும்.
சில சமயம் சைக்கிளிலும், எப்போதாவது பஸ்சிலும் செல்வான். அப்போது, பஸ் கட்டணம் கால் ரூபாய் தான் என்றாலும், அதையும் கணக்கு பார்க்க வேண்டிய குடும்ப சூழல்.
பிராமணர் என்பதால், ஊக்கத்தொகைக்கும், உதவி தொகைக்கும் வழியில்லை; விடுதியில் தங்குவதற்கோ விதி இடம் தரவில்லை. இதனால், பள்ளித் தலைமையாசிரியரிடம் சென்ற அவன், ‘சார்… தினமும் 10 கி.மீ., நடந்து, பள்ளிக்கு வந்து போவது சிரமமாயிருக்கிறது; பஸ்சை எதிர்பார்த்தா, அம்மா பட்டினி கிடக்க வேண்டி வரும். இலவசமாய் விடுதியில் இடம் கிடைக்குமானால், எங்கள் குடும்பமே உங்களுக்கு நன்றி உடையவர்களாக இருப்பர்…’ என்று, கெஞ்சினான்.
அவனது நிலையை அறிந்த ஆசிரியர், ‘உனக்கு உதவணும்ன்னு எனக்கும் விருப்பம்தாம்பா…ஆனா, நான் சிபாரிசு செய்யணும்ன்னா, நீ வகுப்புல முதல் மாணவனாக வரணும்; நல்லா படிச்சு, மார்க் எடு பாக்கலாம்…’ என்றார்.
அவனும் சந்தோஷத்துடன், ‘எல்லா பாடத்திலயும் நிச்சயமாய் முதலாவதாக வருவேன்…’ என்று கூறிச் சென்றான்.
அதே போன்று உற்சாகமாய் படித்து, தேர்வு எழுதினான்.
அன்று கடைசி தேர்வு…
முதுகில் புத்தக மூட்டையுடனும், நெஞ்சில் கனவுகளுடனும் பஸ்சிற்காக காத்திருந்தான். 10:00 மணிக்கு தேர்வு; 9:00 மணிக்கு வர வேண்டிய பஸ், 9:30 மணி வரை வரவில்லை.
‘கடவுளே… இது என்ன சோதனை. நேரத்திற்கு போகவில்லையென்றால் தேர்வு எழுத விடமாட்டார்களே… இனியும் பஸ்சை நம்பி பிரயோஜனமில்ல…’ என்று நினைத்து வீட்டிற்கு ஓடியவன், சுவரில் சாய்த்து வைக்கப்பட்டிருந்த ஓட்டை சைக்கிளை எடுத்து, மிதிக்க ஆரம்பித்தான்.
சுமார், 2 கி.மீ., போயிருப்பான்; டயர் பஞ்சர். இன்னும், 8 கி.மீ., போக வேண்டும். நேரமோ, 10:00 மணியாகி விட்டது.
சைக்கிளை அப்படியே கடை ஒன்றில் போட்டுவிட்டு, முதுகில் இருந்த புத்தக மூட்டையுடன் ஓட ஆரம்பித்தான், ஓடுகிறான்… ஓடுகிறான்… அப்படி ஒரு பேயோட்டம்.
அவன் ஓடிக்கொண்டே இருக்கட்டும்; அவன் இலக்கை அடைந்தானா என்பதை, பிறகு பார்ப்போம்.
உலக நாடுகளில், இந்தியாவைச் சேர்ந்த, அதிலும் தமிழகத்தை சேர்ந்த சாதனையாளர்கள் பலர், நம் நாட்டிற்கு பெருமை சேர்த்துக் கொண்டிருந்தாலும், அரபு நாடுகளில் மட்டும் இந்தியர்கள் தொழில், அறிவியல், மற்றும் கல்வித்துறை போன்றவற்றில் முதன்மை பதவியில் அமர்த்தப்படுவது அபூர்வம். எல்லாமே நாம் செய்து கொடுத்தாலும், பதவி மட்டும் உள்ளூர்வாசிகளுக்குத் தான்!
இதற்கு விதிவிலக்காக இருப்பவர் கும்பகோணத்தைச் சேர்ந்த டாக்டர் ஆர்.சீதாராமன். தோஹா வங்கியின் தலைவராக, உலக அளவில் அவ்வங்கியை வளர்த்து, எல்லாராலும் வியந்து பார்க்கப்படும் மனிதர்.
அவரது மிடுக்கும், கம்பீரமும் பிறரை அசர வைத்தாலும், இந்தியர்கள் என்றால், அதிலும் தமிழர் என்றால் அப்படியே உருகி விடுவார்.
கத்தார் நாட்டில் எந்த இந்திய நிகழ்ச்சி என்றாலும், உடனே கை கொடுப்பார். எளிமையும், இளகிய மனமும் கொண்ட இவர், எளிதில் பிடிக்க முடியாத அளவிற்கு, எப்போதும் பிசினஸ் விஷயமாய் உலகத்தை சுற்றிக் கொண்டிருக்கும் வாலிபர்.
குவைத்தில், ‘பிரன்ட் லைனர்ஸ்’ விழாவிற்கு தலைமை விருந்தினராக அழைத்தவுடன், தன் மற்ற பயணங்களை மாற்றி வைத்து, உடனே ஒப்புதல் தந்தார்.
சீதாராமன் வருகிறார் என்றதும், பல அமைப்பினரும், இந்தியப் பள்ளிகளும் அவரை உரையாற்ற அழைத்தனர். ஆனால், குவைத்தில் அவர் தங்கப் போவது ஒரு நாள் தான் என்றதும், பலருக்கும் ஏமாற்றம்.
இந்த விவரத்தை அவருக்கு தெரிவித்ததும், நிகழ்ச்சிக்கு இரண்டு வாரத்திற்கு முன்பு, சீதாராமனிடமிருந்து அழைப்பு. ‘குவைத்திற்காக நான் மூன்று நாட்கள் ஒதுக்கியிருக்கிறேன்; எங்கள் வங்கி நிகழ்ச்சியை முதல்நாள் ஏற்பாடு செய்யச் சொல்லியிருக்கிறேன். மீதம் இரண்டு நாள், உங்களுக்காக… என்னுடன் என் தாயார், மனைவி மற்றும் மகளும் வருகின்றனர்…’ என்றார்.
அன்று வங்கி சார்பாக, பலரின் அப்பாயின்மென்ட்கள் இருக்க, சீதாராமன் அவர் களுக்கு, ‘கடுக்காய்’ கொடுத்து, இந்திய பள்ளி மற்றும் இந்திய தூதுவர் சந்திப்பு என, நேரம் ஒதுக்கித் தந்தார்.
‘பிரன்ட் லைனர்ஸ்’ புத்தகத்தின், 17ம் தொகுதியை நீதியரசர் ஏ.ஆர்.லட்சுமணன் வெளியிட, சீதாராமன் பெற்றுக் கொள்வதாக ஏற்பாடு; இருவருக்கும் பல ஆண்டு நட்பு இருந்ததால், இருவருமே ரொம்ப ஒத்துழைப்பு கொடுத்தனர்.
காலையில் கலந்துரையாடல்; மாலையில் புத்தக வெளியீடு மற்றும் கலை நிகழ்ச்சிகள். இரண்டுக்குமே சீதாராமனின் தாய், மனைவி மற்றும் மகள் வந்திருந்து ரசித்தனர்.
மலர்ந்த முகத்துடன் காட்சியளித்த அவரது தாயை மேடைக்கு அழைத்து நாங்கள் கவுரவிக்க, கைதட்டல் ஓயவில்லை. அதற்கு காரணம், வறுமையிலும் கூட, சீதாராமனை வளர்த்து, வளப்படுத்தி, உலக அளவில் உயர்த்தியுள்ள அந்த தாயின் சாமர்த்தியமும், கஷ்டத்தை பொருட்படுத்தாமல் படிக்க வைத்து, ஆளாக்கின அவரது வைராக்கிய மாண்பும் தான்!
ஆம்… இன்று தன் உழைப்பாலும், திறமை மற்றும் தன்னம்பிக்கையாலும் சிகரத்திலுள்ள சீதாராமன் தான், அன்று எட்டாம் வகுப்பு தேர்வுக்காக, ஓட்டமாக ஓடியவர். திரும்ப அந்த கதைக்கு வருவோம்…
அன்று —
கை, கால்கள் மற்றும் உடல் தளர்ந்தாலும், அவனது உள்ளம் தளரவில்லை.
வென்றாக வேண்டும் என்ற லட்சியத்துடன் ஓடிக் கொண்டிருந்தவன், பள்ளியை அடைந்த போது, மணி, 10:30; தேர்வு ஆரம்பிக்கப்பட்டிருந்தது. அப்போதும் அவன் தளர்ந்து விடவில்லை; நம்பிக்கையை இழக்காமல் தலைமையாசிரியர் அறையை நோக்கி ஓடினான். அழுகையும், பதட்டமுமாக ஓடி, வந்தவனைப் பார்த்த தலைமையாசிரியர், அவனை அமைதிப்படுத்தி அரவணைத்து அழைத்துப்போய் தேர்வு எழுதச் சொன்னார்.
ஓடிவந்த களைப்பில் கை நடுங்க அவன் எழுத ஆரம்பித்தான். தேர்வு நேரம் முடிய ஒரு மணி நேரம் இருக்கும் போதே முழுதாய் எழுதி கொடுத்துவிட்டு, தலைமையாசிரியரிடம் நன்றி கூறி, அழ ஆரம்பித்தான்.
அந்தத் தேர்வில் அவன் நினைத்தபடியே முதலிடம் பெற்றான்; தகுதி அடிப்படையில் விடுதியிலும் இடம் கிடைத்தது.
அவன் எந்த தருணத்திலும், தன் சூழலையோ, வறுமையையோ நொந்து கொண்டதில்லை. இல்லாததை நினைத்து புலம்பிக் கொண்டிருக்கவில்லை. இருப்பதை ஏற்றுக் கொள்ளும் மனப்பக்குவத்தை அவனது தந்தை, அவனுக்கு கற்றுத் தந்திருந்தார்.
சீதாராமனுடைய தந்தை ஒரு சமஸ்கிருத பண்டிட்!
அந்நாட்களில் தமிழகத்தில் இந்தி எதிர்ப்பு போராட்டம் வலுத்து, வெறுப்புடன் இந்தியை விரட்டியடிக்க, இந்தி, சமஸ்கிருத ஆசிரியர்களுக்கு வேலையில்லாமல் போனதால், அவரது சம்பாத்யம் பறிபோயிற்று. அதன்பின், அவர் பிழைப்பு தேடி பம்பாய் சென்றுவிட, சீதாராமனுடைய அம்மாவும், பாட்டியும் குடும்பத்தை சுமக்க வேண்டியதாயிற்று.
பாட்டியும், இளம் வயதிலேயே முதுமை அடையும் அளவிற்கு உழைத்து, ஓடாய்ப் போனவர். அம்மாவும், பிள்ளைகளுக்கு கஷ்டம் வரக்கூடாது என, அக்கம் பக்கம் வீடுகளில் வேலைபார்த்து, வயிற்றை கழுவும் நிலைமை. அந்த சூழலிலும் கூட சீதாராமனின் விருப்பத்திற்கும், லட்சியத்திற்கும் அவர்கள் குறுக்கே நின்றதில்லை.
எப்போதும் ஊக்கமும், உற்சாகமும் ஊட்டி படிக்க வைத்தனர். சீதாராமனும் வீட்டினரை கஷ்டப்படுத்தாமல், தன்னை விட ஓர் ஆண்டு மூத்த, 10ம் வகுப்பு மாணவர்களுக்கு, டியூஷன் சொல்லித் தருவார். இதனால், காசுக்கு காசும், அடுத்த ஆண்டுக்கான பாடப் புத்தகங்களும் இலவசமாய் கிடைத்தன. பின்னால் சீதாராமன், பி.காம்., முதலாமாண்டு படிக்கும் போதும், மூன்றாம் ஆண்டு மாணவர்களுக்கு பாடம் சொல்லித் தருவார்.
அத்துடன், அதிகாலையில் எழுந்து, வீடுவீடாய் பேப்பர் போடுவது, ஓட்டல்களில் வேலை, சினிமா போஸ்டர் ஒட்டுவது என, பல்வேறு பொருளாதார கஷ்டங்களுக்கிடையே படித்த சீதாராமன், பி.காம்.,மில் கோல் மெடலிஸ்ட். அதன்பின், சி.ஏ., படிப்பை, தன் சொந்த முயற்சியாலே படித்து முடித்தவருக்கு, ஓமனில் வேலை கிடைத்தது.
அதன்பின், கத்தாரில் நலிவடைந்திருந்த, தோஹா வங்கியின் பொறுப்பை ஏற்று, அதன் உயரத்தை உயர்த்திக் கொண்டிருக்கிறார்.
இயல், இசை, நாடகம் என, அவருக்கு சின்ன வயதிலிருந்தே ஈடுபாடு; படிக்கும் போதே, பெண் வேடம் போட்டிருப்பதுடன், பல குரல் வித்தகர். பொதுவாய் ஒருவர் பெரிய பதவியை வகித்து விட்டாலே, கற்ற கலைகளை விட்டு விடுவர்; ஆனால், சீதாராமன் இதற்கு விதிவிலக்கு. குவைத்திலும் மேடையில், சிவாஜி வசனம் பேசி, அசத்தினார்.
வசதி வாய்ப்புகள் இருந்தாலும், அவற்றை பயன்படுத்தாமல் வீணாய்ப் போனவர்களுக்கு மத்தியில், ‘வறுமையும் கஷ்டமும், படிப்பிற்கும், முன்னேற்றத்திற்கும் தடையல்ல…’ என்று நிரூபித்திருக்கும் சீதாராமன், ஒரு முன்னுதாரண தமிழர்; உலக அளவில், இந்தியர்களின் பெருமையை உயர்த்தி பிடித்திருப்பவர்.

என்.சி.மோகன்தாஸ்  ….in Dinamalar…Vaara malar

Natarajan

Joke of the Day…” Dont Worry ..we will find out…” !!!

Missing Wife

>
> A husband went to the police station to file a
> “missing person” report for his missing wife:
>
> Husband :-I lost my wife, she went shopping & hasn’t
> come back yet.
>
> Inspector :-What is her height?
>
> Husband :-I never checked.
>
> Inspector :-Slim or healthy?.
>
> Husband :-Not slim, but is healthy.
>
> Inspector :-Color of eyes?
>
> Husband :-Never noticed.
>
> Inspector :-Color of hair?
>
> Husband :-Changes according to season.
>
> Inspector :-What was she wearing?
>
> Husband :-Not sure whether it was a dress or a suit.
>
> Inspector :-Was she driving?
>
> Husband :- yes.
>
> Inspector :-color of the car? . . . . .
>
> Husband :-black Audi A8 with supercharged 3.0 litre V6
> engine generating 333 horse power, teamed with an
> eight-speed tip-tronic automatic transmission with
> manual mode. And it has full LED headlights, which use
> light emitting diodes for all light functions and has a very thin scratch
> on the front left door………and then the husband started crying…
>
> Inspector:-Don’t worry sir,…..We will find your car.

Source::: input from a friend of mine

Natarajan

Joke of the Day… ” Is he OK …? ” !!!

The Teacher had asked the class to write an essay about an unusual event that happened during the past week.

Little Johnny got up to read his. It began, “My daddy fell in well last week.”

“Good Lord!” the teacher exclaimed. “Is he OK?”

“He must be,” said Little Johnny. “He stopped calling for help yesterday.”

 

Source::::joke a day.com

Natarajan

” When I Started Loving Myself….”

When I started loving myself     ….

A poem by Charlie Chaplin written on his 70th birthday on April 16, 1959:

I understood that I’m always and at any given opportunity
in the right place at the right time.
And I understood that all that happens is right –
from then on I could be calm.
Today I know: It’s called TRUST.

When I started to love myself I understood how much it can offend somebody
When I tried to force my desires on this person,
even though I knew the time is not right and the person was not ready for it,
and even though this person was me.
Today I know: It’s called LETTING GO

When I started loving myself
I could recognize that emotional pain and grief
are just warnings for me to not live against my own truth.
Today I know: It’s called AUTHENTICALLY BEING.

When I started loving myself
I stopped longing for another life
and could see that everything around me was a request to grow.
Today I know: It’s called MATURITY.

When I started loving myself
I stopped depriving myself of my free time
and stopped sketching further magnificent projects for the future.
Today I only do what’s fun and joy for me,
what I love and what makes my heart laugh,
in my own way and in my tempo.
Today I know: it’s called HONESTY.

When I started loving myself
I escaped from all what wasn’t healthy for me,
from dishes, people, things, situations
and from everyhting pulling me down and away from myself.
In the beginning I called it the “healthy egoism”,
but today I know: it’s called SELF-LOVE.

When I started loving myself
I stopped wanting to be always right
thus I’ve been less wrong.
Today I’ve recognized: it’s called HUMBLENESS.

When I started loving myself
I refused to live further in the past
and worry about my future.
Now I live only at this moment where EVERYTHING takes place,
like this I live every day and I call it CONSCIOUSNESS.

When I started loving myself
I recognized, that my thinking
can make me miserable and sick.
When I requested for my heart forces,
my mind got an important partner.
Today I call this connection HEART WISDOM.

We do not need to fear further discussions,
conflicts and problems with ourselves and others
since even stars sometimes bang on each other
and create new worlds.
Today I know: THIS IS LIFE!

Source:::: Ba-ba mail site

Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Brahmam is the basis for Nature, Living Beings and God…”

The Reality which sustains the cosmos and the cell is one, the all-pervasive Consciousness (Brahmam). When this infinite vastness is related to the cosmos, it is called the ‘Supreme Divine’ (Paramatma). It is called Atma when it is considered as the core of individual beings. All three are one entity, but they ‘appear’ different and delude the short-sighted. This characteristic is known as Maya. The Supreme Power uses the three Gunas, serenity (Satwa), activity (Rajas) and inertia (tamas) to express Itself differently. The Gunas urge a person towards knowing, desiring or working. When Maya impels Brahmam to project itself, leveraging Satwa Guna, it appears as Eshwara or God. Brahmam projects itself as living beings (Jivi) leveraging Rajo Guna. It becomes Nature (Prakriti) when associated with Tamo Guna. Thus Brahmam is the basis of all three – Nature, Living Beings and God. Maya is the mirror in which Brahmam is reflected.

Sathya Sai Baba